• Source: Hanan Bulu Bulu
    • Hanan bulu" target="_blank">Bulu bulu" target="_blank">Bulu (Arabic: حنان بلوبلو, born as Hanan Abdallah Abdelkarim, 4 May 1966, Omdurman, Sudan), is a modern Sudanese singer-songwriter and recording artist. In her music, she combines both songs by older Sudanese musicians as well as her own compositions. Her songs are characterized by modern arrangements ٫ played by her own band of professional musicians, and she enjoys wide popularity in Sudan as well as abroad.


      Personal life and artistic career


      Hanan bulu" target="_blank">Bulu bulu" target="_blank">Bulu was born in Omdurman, one of the three cities that make up the metropolitan area of Greater Khartoum. Singing many popular songs about her country, she has produced several albums and music videos. In 1986, she was one of the few female singers who appeared in modern Western outfits, even without the headscarf that was obligatory during the government of Omar al Bashir up to 2019. Before the abolishment of Public Order Law, the authorities had imposed many restrictions for women's appearance in public.
      In the Rough Guide to World Music, she was mentioned along other Sudanese women singers of the 20th century, such as the pioneer of Sudanese music Aisha al-Falatiya and the internationally successful musical group Al-Balabil. As the "Madonna of 1980s Sudanese pop", she was enjoying popularity with her upbeat style that combined suggestive lyrics and dalooka-style rhythms with the erotic bridal "dove-dance" of Sudanese weddings. An earlier version of the same guide reported that in 1986, she impressed audiences at the Khartoum International Fair.
      Encouraged by her popular recognition, she ran for the chairmanship of the General Sudanese Union for Music Professions, the association of Sudanese singers, but was not elected. With the emergence of the fundamentalists' regime in the late 1980s, she suffered persecution, was beaten up, publicly slurred, and banned from performing. For some time, she continued to make music under these difficult conditions, but in 1993 she fled the country.


      Recordings


      On the compilation album Two Niles to Sing a Melody with songs by famous Sudanese musicians of the 1970s, she was featured with her song "Alamy Wa Shagiya" (My Pain and Suffering).
      In 2021, she continued performing with her son, the singer Mohammed Bashir.


      See also


      Music of Sudan
      List of Sudanese singers
      Al Balabil (musical group)


      References




      Further reading


      Sikainga, Ahmad (2012), "A short history of Sudanese popular music", in Ryle, John; Willis, Justin; Baldo, Suliman; Madut Jok, Jok (eds.), The Sudan Handbook (digital ed.), London: Rift Valley Institute, pp. 243–253, ISBN 9781847010308
      Verney, Peter; Jerome, Helen; Yassin, Moawia (2006). "Sudan. Still yearning to dance". In Broughton, Simon; Ellingham, Mark; Lusket, Jon (eds.). The Rough Guide to World Music: Africa & Middle East. London, New York: Rough Guides. pp. 397–407. ISBN 978-1-84353-551-5. OCLC 76761811.


      External links


      Hanan bulubulu on Facebook
      Hanan BuluBulu on Instagram
      Hanan BuluBulu on TikTok
      Hanan bulu" target="_blank">Bulu bulu" target="_blank">Bulu at AllMusic
      Hanan bulu" target="_blank">Bulu bulu" target="_blank">Bulu Lyrics, Song Meanings
      Short article on Sudanese women singers

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: